With its adoption of a decentralized ledger for 100% of its 2026 National Budget (NB) on January 15, 2026, the Philippines became the first country in the world to have their National Budget completely placed on a blockchain. The Philippine Government’s Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) announced that the 2026 General Appropriations Act (GAA) has been integrated into a Blockchain-based Digital Bayanihan Chain as a way of providing a “Permanent Digital Receipt” for each and every peso spent by the Philippine Government.
This cutting-edge Programme encompasses every facet of the budget lifecycle beginning with Congressional Approval and Funds Disbursement through to Final Payment and Audit, and seeks to address one of the greatest challenges to the economy of the Philippines; that of disappearing funds as a result of bureaucratic inefficiencies and/or corruption.
The “Digital Seal of Truth”
At the heart of this system is what DICT Secretary Henry Aguda calls the “Digital Seal of Truth.” Unlike traditional digital records which can be altered or deleted by administrators, the blockchain-based GAA creates a tamper-proof record.
“This means the people’s money has a permanent digital receipt,” Aguda said during a press briefing at Malacañang Palace. “It cannot be altered or falsified. While other countries only use blockchain for portions of their budget, the Philippines will complete the year as the first country to put the entire budget cycle in a tamper-proof system.”
The system utilizes BayaniChain, a platform built on Polygon (a Layer-2 Ethereum solution), ensuring that the data is not only secure but also transparent. Journalists, citizens, and watch dogs will soon have access to track all of the budget allocations and how money is moving in real-time. Effectively crowdsourcing the auditor function.
Ending the Era of “Budget Insertions”
The guidelines being developed by this initiative are a reaction to many years of corruption. Most recently there has been controversy regarding flood control and funds wasting away without help to improve quality of life through building infrastructure. By “chaining” contracts and disbursements to specific budget items on a public ledger, the government hopes to eliminate “budget insertions”—last-minute, unscrutinized additions to the budget that are often vehicles for pork barrel corruption.
DICT Undersecretary Dave Almirol explained that the system will transition to a “consortium blockchain” model. In this setup, critical government agencies—including the DICT, the Department of Budget and Management (DBM), and the Commission on Audit (COA)—will operate their own nodes.
“When DBM enters budget data, DICT sees it immediately. COA sees it too,” Almirol said. The visibility available to both parties enables neither party to manipulate their respective sets of numbers behind the scenes, thus creating an automated system of checks and balances for both parties.
The CADENA Act and Future Enforcement
The technical rollout is supported by legislative muscle. The Citizen Access and Disclosure of Expenditures for National Accountability (CADENA) Act, which is currently moving through the Senate, mandates that all government agencies upload detailed procurement documents to this blockchain transparency portal.
Once fully enacted, the law will require an “integrity chain” for all infrastructure projects. This means a bridge or a school cannot just be a line item on a spreadsheet; its entire lifecycle—from the release of funds to the buying of cement—must be recorded on the ledger.
AI-Powered Transparency
Looking ahead, the government plans to make this data not just available, but accessible. Officials announced plans to integrate Artificial Intelligence (AI) into the transparency portal. This feature will allow ordinary citizens to query the budget in natural language—asking questions like, “How much was spent on the flood control project in Bulacan?” or “Who is the contractor for the new school in Cebu?”—and receive instant, verified answers pulled directly from the blockchain.
A Global First
While nations like Estonia and Singapore have long used blockchain for specific government services, the Philippines is the first to apply the technology to the entirety of its fiscal skeleton. Manila is using technology to create an open, unchangeable record of the national budget. This will help them develop an accountable and transparent government, unlike what has happened with politics in the past.




